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      Proximal, distal, and the politics of causation: what's level got to do with it?

      American Journal of Public Health
      Causality, Epidemiology, Health Status Disparities, History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, Humans, Politics, Public Health, history, Social Conditions, Terminology as Topic

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          Abstract

          Causal thinking in public health, and especially in the growing literature on social determinants of health, routinely employs the terminology of proximal (or downstream) and distal (or upstream). I argue that the use of these terms is problematic and adversely affects public health research, practice, and causal accountability. At issue are distortions created by conflating measures of space, time, level, and causal strength. To make this case, I draw on an ecosocial perspective to show how public health got caught in the middle of the problematic proximal-distal divide--surprisingly embraced by both biomedical and social determinist frameworks--and propose replacing the terms proximal and distal with explicit language about levels, pathways, and power.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          18172144
          2376874
          10.2105/AJPH.2007.111278

          Chemistry
          Causality,Epidemiology,Health Status Disparities,History, 19th Century,History, 20th Century,Humans,Politics,Public Health,history,Social Conditions,Terminology as Topic

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